| In his conception, representation comprised two essential elements, the visible and the utterable. |
|
| The visible, rather than being subsidiary to the spoken word, repeatedly encompassed both the utterable and the unutterable. |
|
| There is nothing she can say, for the cause of her anxiety is not utterable. |
|
| The roars, belike, would have gradually subsided in dreadful rumblings of more than utterable or conquerable mirth. |
|
| Richard Curtis's film is a good-natured fantasy romance of such utterable daftness that it's impossible to dislike. |
|
| For even so self-guaranteeing a statement as the self-predication 'The Beautiful itself is beautiful' could not be truly utterable unless the Form referred to endured long enough for the predicate to be attached to it. |
|